Social and Emotional Intelligence as Factors in Terrorist Propaganda: An Analysis of the Way Mass Media Portrays the Behavior of Islamic Terrorist Groups
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. The Concepts of Social and Emotional Intelligence
2.2. Terrorist Propaganda
Terrorist Propaganda and the Profile of the Socio-Emotional Intelligent Terrorist
2.3. The Relationship between Mass-Media and Terrorism Justified by Social and Emotional Intelligence
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Purpose and Objectives of the Research
3.2. Hypotheses of the Research
3.3. Procedure
3.4. Measures
4. Results
4.1. Quantitative Analysis
4.2. Qualitative Analysis
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Limitations and Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | Description of the Category |
---|---|
Neutral words | those words without emotional-affective connotations |
Words with negative content | words with negative emotional-affective connotations |
Words with positive content | words with positive emotional-affective connotations |
Words with religious content | words from the semantic field of religion, spirituality, faith, religious rituals |
Words with aggressive content | words with negative emotional-affective connotations that refer to aggressive acts, abuse, or power |
Words with cultural-geographic and institutional content | words referring to institutions of the state, media agencies, geographical areas, and culture |
Total of words | all the words used in the text of the news was registered, including linkers and those words used in the title |
Most frequently used word | the word which was most used in the news analyzed |
Most frequently used punctuation mark | the punctuation mark that appeared most in the news analyzed |
Total of punctuation marks | all the punctuation marks used in the text of the news, except for the hyphen which is considered a spelling mark |
Mass-Media Channel | Title of News and Year |
---|---|
PRO TV | “UN warns: Europe hit by a new wave of terrorist attacks”, 2019 “ISIS jihadists are urging new attacks in a country severely affected by bombings in the past”, 2019 “Black widow”, “wanted in Russia. Police fear she could blow herself up”, 2019 |
DIGI TV | “One of the leaders of the Islamic State terrorist network, killed in a military operation in Iraq”, 2021 “ISIS-affiliated jihadists have beheaded dozens of people. Witness of the massacre: “They kidnapped women and children and set fire to entire villages”, 2020 “Terrorist attack in Vienna. The moments of horror, described by the witnesses: “He did not shoot randomly. He killed in cold blood.” Who are the victims?” 2020 |
ANTENA 3 | “Islamist leader: Romania should convert to Islam!”, 2016 “JIHAD in Islam. Terrorist attack on Tel Aviv. The 11-month-old son of a BBC reporter died in the airstrike”, 2012 “The enemy of Allah!” “How a Russian radio announcer paid for his beliefs about Islam”, 2012 |
KANAL-D | “A new terrorist attack was committed in France, in Nice, 3 people being killed”, 2020 “The head of ISIS died like a coward, killing three children. Statements by President Donald Trump”, 2019 “They escaped the bombings in Syria, but now they are starving in Romania! The heartbreaking confessions of a woman with four children: “I only saw people with their heads cut off! It was terrible!”, 2017 |
AGERPRESS | “The Islamic State extremist group is no longer capable of complex attacks, says a terrorism expert”, 2021 “Islamic State terrorist group claims double suicide attack in Baghdad, killing 32 people and injuring 110”, 2021 “DIICOT: Man from Neamţ County converted to Islam, detained for terrorism”, 2017 |
REALITATEA TV | “France declares war on Islamist terrorism after the attack in Paris”, 2020 “Germany announces the arrest of 14 citizens who wanted to organize a terrorist attack“, 2021 “Terrorist attack—Several university professors were killed in a bomb attack”, 2021 |
Mass-Media Channel | Title of News and Year |
---|---|
BBC | “Vienna shooting: Austria hunts suspects after ‘Islamist terror’ attack”, 2020 “Sahayb Abu: Terror plot accused made pro-IS comments for a ‘thrill’”, 2020 “Hervé Gourdel: Man sentenced over French tourist’s killing”, 2014 |
Euronews | “Europe’s problem with jihad: The foreign fighters who tore families apart”, 2019 “Dutch photographer shot dead by ISIS-linked captors in Philippines”, 2019 “To stop the potential “Jihadi Jacks” of the future, British Muslim converts need support”, 2019 |
ABC | “‘It is going to become worse’: ISIS prisoner predicts attack on Europe after al-Baghdadi death”, 2019 “New ISIS leader is ‘a nobody,’ but US knows ‘almost nothing’ about him: Official”, 2019 “Islamic State never needed a caliphate to keep menacing the world. Now it’s regrouping”, 2020 |
CBS NEWS | “Suspect arrested for plotting New York City attack in the name of ISIS”, 2019 “American Airlines mechanic charged with sabotaging plane accused of having ISIS videos”, 2019 “FBI warns of the “continued threat” of violent extremists and hate crimes”, 2019 |
NEW YORK TIMES | “The Politics of Terrorism in a Combustible Europe”, 2020 “Terrorism Fears Feed the Rise of France’s Extreme Right”, 2021 “After Terror Attacks, Muslims Wonder About Their Place in France”, 2020 |
WASHINGTON POST | “Opinion: Ten years later, Islamist terrorism isn’t the threat it used to be”, 2021 “Before becoming a terrorist leader, ISIS chief was a prison informer in Iraq for U.S., records show”, 2021 “The Islamic State has ‘provinces’ in Africa. That doesn’t mean what you might think. Africa’s militant groups retain considerable autonomy, research shows”, 2021 |
Mean | Standard Deviation | % Total of Words | |
---|---|---|---|
Words with religious content | M = 9.78 | sd = 5.72 | 0.03 |
Words with aggressive content | M = 21.94 | sd = 14.02 | 0.07 |
Words with negative content | M = 11.11 | sd = 10.44 | 0.03 |
Words with positive content | M = 1.72 | sd = 2.27 | 0.005 |
Words with neutral content | M = 244.98 | sd = 146.85 | 0.78 |
Words with cultural-geographic and institutional content | M = 22.78 | sd = 15.34 | 0.05 |
Total of words | M = 312.28 | sd = 175.751 | - |
Total of punctuation marks | M = 42.33 | sd = 26.97 | - |
Mean | Standard Deviation | % Total of Words | |
---|---|---|---|
Words with religious content | M = 30.22 | sd = 26.86 | 0.04 |
Words with aggressive content | M = 29.28 | sd = 29.16 | 0.04 |
Words with negative content | M = 25.89 | sd = 15.91 | 0.03 |
Words with positive content | M = 9.28 | sd = 7.78 | 0.01 |
Words with neutral content | M = 585.67 | sd = 342.05 | 0.80 |
Words with cultural-geographic and institutional content | M = 46.33 | sd = 27.61 | 0.06 |
Total of words | M = 725.06 | sd = 417.586 | - |
Total of punctuation marks | M = 109.06 | sd = 63.24 | - |
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Coman, C.; Andrioni, F.; Ghita, R.-C.; Bularca, M.C. Social and Emotional Intelligence as Factors in Terrorist Propaganda: An Analysis of the Way Mass Media Portrays the Behavior of Islamic Terrorist Groups. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12219. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112219
Coman C, Andrioni F, Ghita R-C, Bularca MC. Social and Emotional Intelligence as Factors in Terrorist Propaganda: An Analysis of the Way Mass Media Portrays the Behavior of Islamic Terrorist Groups. Sustainability. 2021; 13(21):12219. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112219
Chicago/Turabian StyleComan, Claudiu, Felicia Andrioni, Roxana-Catalina Ghita, and Maria Cristina Bularca. 2021. "Social and Emotional Intelligence as Factors in Terrorist Propaganda: An Analysis of the Way Mass Media Portrays the Behavior of Islamic Terrorist Groups" Sustainability 13, no. 21: 12219. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112219